What do your coworkers do to annoy you?

Nurses General Nursing

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Last night when I got report from the RN who was leaving, he told me the doc had ordered a stat med for one of my patients. After report, I checked the chart, and found the order timed for a half hour before the start of my shift. I bit my tongue, gave the med, and when I discarded the syringe, found the sharps container overflowing. This was just too much, so I caught the other nurse just as he was leaving, and gave him an earful about the sharps container. He responded that the aides are supposed to replace the containers. This was the final straw. Not only had he not given a stat med ordered on his shift, he had put me at risk for a needle stick, then used the "It's not my job" excuse. I let him have it with both barrels. After he left, I checked on my other patient, a GI bleed who was having frequent bloody stools. She wanted to be helped off the bed pan, but I had to make her wait while I went for gloves, because the box in the room was empty. :( :(

I was venting to some of the others on my shift, and we came up with a list of co workers' annoying habits.

Not emptying an overflowing garbage can.

Leaving packaging from meds all over the counter in the med room.

Starting the GoLytely prep an hour before the end of their shift.

Leaving the bags from discontinued IV meds hanging at the bedside.

Leaving a patient in a dirty gown after he has spilled food on himself.

Not giving pain meds on time.

Leaving a patient's room a mess.

Not making sure there are adequate supplies in the room so you don't have to run for everything you need.

Not doing mouth care.

Always coming 5 or 10 minutes late and delaying report while they pour coffee and "get organized."

Giggling and whispering in report.

Not answering call bells for any patient but their own.

I'm sure I could come up with many more if I thought about it some more.

Ah. Sorry misunderstood. lol

That's ok....still a bit sensitive here :)

No offense taken here.I found these errors checking my charts before passing meds.My problem was that the patient needed the mag as soon as it was ordered and the nurse didn't know the difference between mgso4 and mso4.I gave the mag as soon as i found it,but it was hours after it was ordered.

another problem,with the crazy way that our floor is staffed, all H... is usually breaking loose at 7 pm. Sometimes it is almost impossible to check all orders before assessing the first patient,and some of my coworkers don't do it at all, they wait for the charge nurse to check them.

ER Nurse here,

I consider myself very flexible, not much gets to me. I will change to overfilled needle box, get more gloves, hang another IV bag, when I come on and the bag is dry. Will get the urine that has not been gotten in the 8 hours previous to me coming on. All with a smile and an attitude that this is why we change shifts so that the work will get done and the patient will get to their next destination.

My biggest pet peeve is when the other shifts are complaining about, (when we come in the trauma rooms are not stocked, the needle boxes are overflowing, this urine has not been gotten in the 8 hours previous to them coming on shift. etc. etc.) It is a big circle and the things that most complain about I have found are things that they themselves do not always get done. I am exaggerating about the urine here.

One time I was out of the building and walking to my car when a day shift unit clerk came out yelling that my charge nurse was paging me overhead, I thought my patient was dying or something, I get in there. My charge nurse looks at me and apoligizes and says the oncoming nurse wants to talk to you. A urine was sent to the lab labled with the correct patient, and with the correct order requisition, however the lable printer did not print a medical record number, this nurse was losing her mind because the lab said they could not accept the urine without the lable having the medical record number. "Now I am going to have to tie up a tech" (of course not herself) to walk to the lab a 2 second jaunt, to take a lable with the medical record number, otherwise she would have to get another urine sample. I don't know, I felt this was not something to sweat, this patient was a young healthy female with some abd. pain, she could have produced another specimen. After this nurse finally saw that I was pretty annoyed and not completely devastated by this quote unquote error. She says to me, you need to be more careful and check the medical record numbers, I said you cannot tell me that you look at the medical record number everytime you send a specimen especially if you are busy, she said yes I do. I said I don't believe you and walked off. Two months later, guess who didn't check a medical record number or a name for that matter, we had two patients with the same last name, she labled the urine wrong. I was tempted to call her butt, at 0300 am and tell her but, it was enough satisfaction to know that she is not perfect either.

I guess I think we need to pick our battles wisely. I will say something if I feel a patient has been neglected or their care seriously jepordized. Otherwise I say we should not sweat the small stuff.

It is hard to tolerate tardiness though I agree.

Y2KRN

Don't tell me how busy YOU are, I've got work to do.

I've got to tidy this place up so it is clean and set up for the next shift and not the dogs breakfast that I was greeted with.

Some people bug me when they show up for work.

Some people bug me when they don't show for work.

Some people just plain bug me.

I'm sure people have the same feelings towards me.

Originally posted by FullMoonMadness

My problem was that the patient needed the mag as soon as it was ordered and the nurse didn't know the difference between mgso4 and mso4.

Just a thought, but maybe the problem then was the way the order was written - this is the first time I've ever seen morphine written as mso4 - is this a common way of writing it in the US? Seems to me it would be pretty easy to misread it - maybe some education of the Drs who write the order could be the solution.

The biggest thing that honks me off, is coworkers that ask for a favor, such as covering oncall or an extra day to pick up for them and CONVENIENTLY get alzheimers when you ask them!!

Also, nurses that know that something has been ordered and deliberately leave it for the next person! Sometimes, It just drives me mad, that the SAME nurses are the ones that get by with skimpy work...I do not know how they can sleep at night!

How about a young nurse who brings all of her personal life to work and expects us all to be enthralled. Or nurses who date each other and work together, or are married and whisper to each other all shift. Or the nurse who won't take report until she has her report sheet all perfectly highlighted and spaced. Or the one who puts her hand in your face if she's not ready to talk to you. Or the ones who habitually complain about others and commit the exact same infringements. Or the nurses who you think are on drugs or reek of dope smoke? Or the old nurses who like to rake you over the coals about some minor infraction/nuisance really in front of as many other staff and doctors as possible and as loudly as possible, even though you catch many things on them each night and quietly fix them.

Sorry ...must have hit a nerve.

Specializes in Geri, psych, TCU, neuro--AKA LTC.

Nurses and CNAs that b*tch behind people's backs, and don't bring the problem up to the offender, then get pissy when nothing changes.

The charge nurse taking and transcribing orders into my MAR and not saying a word.

One particular nurse that works nocs and wouldn't get off her butt if the roof was caving in around her.

People who always have a gripe about something, who on a beautiful 75 degree day would say something like, "yeah, but we could really use some rain..."

Calling in on weekends...

People who take everything personally, get over it!

A nurse who sits online for an hour then realizes that she has charting to do and gets an extra hour of pay to do it.

Some of the same other stuff, not getting U/As, changing caths, checking a wound, etc.

As for report, I have been known to start the tape whether everyone's there or not (Who said passive-aggressive?)...

This is a true story. (I preface my comments with that statement because most nurses can't believe such a place exists.)

Several years ago, I went to work at a hospital in their ICU. I was agency. The nurse who gave me my 5 minute orientation said: "Don't do any suctioning, respiratory takes total care of the vent and patients respiratory needs. Don't bathe, or turn the pt. the techs do that. Don't empty any cannisters or foley bags, or drainage bags, the nursing assistants do that. You do not need to check the chart or the orders. We have two secretaries 24 hours a day, they take off all orders & will notify you if there is anything you need to know. Don't call the lab for anything, you never need to pick up a phone on this unit....the secretaries will get anything you need...reports, results....they follow all that & will put the reports here on your desk as they come in. We have a satellite pharmacy on this unit. You will simply go to your pt.'s bin & get their meds...the pharmacist rarely misses having your pt.s meds in your bin.

We NEVER empty trash here....housekeeping takes care of that.

I said, "cool." "Sounds like a real cool place."

She said: "The hospital firmly believes that RN's should only do RN work."

It was a 21 bed unit. It was the most fascinating place I ever worked....total organization , professionalism, and expediency.

I had two patients.

This thread made me think of it, with the annoying things your co-workers do.......so many of which are housekeeping or nurse assistant duties; or a secretary's.

Originally posted by Brita01

What we call "loud and common" here. Nurses who talk and guffaw loudly at 3am while patients are trying to sleep. It's like they don't have a clue.

When I worked nocs in a surg unit, that drove me crazy, too!

When I asked them to quiet down one noc, you would have thought I'd asked each of them to hand over their first-born child, the way they looked at me.

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